Protein-induced pluripotent cell technology and uses thereof

ABSTRACT

A method of generating protein-induced pluripotent stem cells by delivering bacterially expressed reprogramming proteins into nuclei of starting somatic cells using the QQ-protein transduction technique, repeating several cell reprogramming cycles for creating reprogrammed protein-induced pluripotent stem cells, moving the reprogrammed cells into a feeder-free medium for expansion, and expanding and passaging the reprogrammed cells in a whole dish for generating homogeneous piPS cells. Also provided are the piPCS cells formed using this method and uses thereof.

REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No.16/271,150, filed Feb. 8, 2019, which is a divisional of U.S. patentapplication Ser. No. 15/808,205, filed Nov. 9, 2017, now U.S. Pat. No.10,221,397, which is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No.14/113,522, filed Feb. 20, 2014, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,816,076, which is aU.S. national stage application of PCT/US2012/036051, filed May 2, 2012,which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No.61/481,273, filed May 2, 2011. The entire content of each application isincorporated herein by reference.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to protein transduction and uses thereof.More specifically, the present invention relates to a protein-inducedpluripotent stem cell (piPSC) technology that generate high-quality piPScells within one week with nearly 100% conversion efficiency and itsapplications thereof. The present invention also relates to afeeder-free piPSC culture condition and a whole dish expansion withoutcolony picking and clonal expansion and their applications thereof.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Embryonic stem (ES) cells are stem cells derived from an embryo. Withthe present state of technology, the creation of a human embryonic stemcell line requires the destruction of a human embryo, raising acontroversial ethical issue for human ES cell research. ES cells aredistinguished from other types of cells by two distinctive properties:pluripotency and unlimited self-renewal. Under defined conditions, EScells are capable of renewing themselves indefinitely, allowing ES cellsto be employed as useful tools for both research and regenerativemedicine, since we can produce limitless ES cells for continued researchor clinical use. ES cells are also able to differentiate into allderivatives of the three primary germ layers: ectoderm, endoderm, andmesoderm, include more than 220 cell types in the adult body.Pluripotency distinguishes ES cells from adult stem cells found in adulttissues; while ES cells can generate all cell types in the body, adultstem cells are multipotent and can only produce a limited number of celltypes within this tissue type.

ES cell therapies can be used for regenerative medicine and tissuereplacement for injury or disease treatments, such as blood,immune-system and different diseases related genetic diseases, cancers,cardio-vascular disease, juvenile diabetes, Parkinson's and Alzheimer'sdiseases, wound healing, rheumatoid arthritis, baldness, deafness,blindness, amyotrophic lateral-sclerosis, muscular dystrophy and spinalcord injuries. Besides the ethical concerns of stem cell therapy, thereis a technical problem of graft-versus-host disease associated withallogeneic stem cell transplantation. Since the ES cells used forregeneration medicine are from human embryos, immuno-rejection will bealways a major problem when transplantation of the ES cells is performedto individual patients for disease treatment. Other potential uses of EScells include investigation of early human development, study of geneticdisease, in vitro systems for toxicology testing and drug screening.

The process for culturing ES cells is quite burdensome. Human ES cellsare isolated by transferring the inner cell mass into a plasticlaboratory culture dish. The inner surface of the culture dish istypically coated with a feeder layer: mouse embryonic skin cells thathave been treated so they will not divide, but provide ES cells a stickysurface attaching to. Feeder cells also release nutrients into theculture medium. Researchers have devised ways to grow embryonic stemcells without mouse feeder cells. This is a significant scientificadvance because of the risk that viruses or other macromolecules in themouse cells may be transmitted to the human cells.

The process for ES cell expansion is also quite time consuming. ES cellsform colonies. Usually, the ES cell expansion is first to selectindividual ES cell colonies and then expand the selected colonies. Thissignificantly slows down the ES cell expansion and may cause highermutational rate if the selected colonies contain genetic mutations.

In 2006, Shinya Yamanaka and colleagues showed that introduction of fourtranscription genes: Oct4, Sox2, Klf4 and c-Myc using retroviruses intomouse fibroblasts could generate induced pluripotent stem cells (iPScells), which display pluripotency. This is a revolutionary discoverysince for the first time it is shown that somatic cells can bereprogrammed back to ES-like cells. The iPS cells are believed to beidentical to natural ES cells in many aspects, such as the expression ofcertain stem cell genes and proteins, chromatin methylation patterns,doubling time, embryoid body formation, teratoma formation, viablechimera formation, the unlimited self-new property anddifferentiability. However, the full extent of their relation to naturalpluripotent stem cells is still being assessed.

It is believed that iPS cell technology is less ethically controversial,since this technology allows for generation of pluripotent stem cellswithout human embryo. This technology may also enable generation ofpatient specific ES cell lines that could potentially be used for cellreplacement therapies to treat various human diseases and allows thegeneration of ES cell lines from patients with a variety of geneticdiseases and will provide invaluable models to study those diseases andfor drug screening.

In 2007, several groups showed that the iPS cells generated from mousefibroblasts via four-gene retroviral delivery produced viable chimera.These groups used Nanog for detection of iPS cells, indicating thatNanog is a major determinant of cellular pluripotency. However, c-Myc isoncogenic and 20% of the chimeric mice developed cancer. In a laterstudy, Yamanaka reported iPSCs could be generated without c-Myc. Theprocess takes longer and is not as efficient, but the resulting chimerasdidn't develop cancer.

Also in 2007, iPS cells were generated from human somatic cells,representing a milestone for iPS cell technology. However, the viraltransfection systems used inserted the genes at random locations in thehost's genome and created major concerns for potential therapeuticapplications of these iPSCs, because the created cells might be prone toform tumors. To overcome these dangers, an adenovirus was used totransport the requisite four genes into the genomes of skin and livercells of mice, resulting in cells identical to embryonic stem cells.Since the adenovirus does not combine any of its own genes with thetargeted host, the danger of creating tumors is eliminated, althoughthis method has not yet been tested on human cells. Yamanaka and severalother labs have since demonstrated reprogramming can be accomplished viaplasmid without any virus transfection system at all, although at verylow efficiencies.

In May 2009, two reports by Ding's and Kim's labs reported that bothmouse and human iPS cells (piPSCs) were generated by direct delivery offour proteins, which were coded by the four reprogramming genes, thuseliminating the need for viruses or genetic modification of humansomatic cells. A recent report further showed that iPSCs could begenerated using mRNAs to generate mRNA-induced iPS cells (riPSCs). Thissolved one of the most challenging safety hurdles associated withpersonalized stem cell-based medicine and enables scientists to makepiPS cells without genetically altering them. Because the proteins doeventually degrade, there should be no trace of their existence in thecells by the time they would be used for experiments or therapies,representing a major breakthrough in the iPS cell technology.

Despite intense worldwide research efforts, the current iPS celltechnology still suffers FOUR major problems: 1. Inefficiency; 2. Timeconsumption; 3. Complex and expensive; and 4. Quality problem.

The current iPS cells technology only converts 0.001-1% somatic cellsinto iPS cells. For gene delivery using virus vectors, the conversionefficiency from somatic cells to iPS cells could reach 0.1-1%, dependingon different starting somatic cells. Using embryonic fibroblast as thestarting cells, the conversion efficiency reaches ˜1%; however, usingadult somatic cells, the conversion efficiency is <0.1%. For genedelivery using non-virus means, this conversion efficiency is <0.1%. Theconversion efficiency for human protein-induced iPS cells is extremelylow which only reaches 0.001%.

Additionally, the current iPS cell technology, including both genedelivery and protein delivery, usually takes 4-8 weeks to completereprogramming of human somatic cells into iPS cells and requires manycycles of gene transfection or protein delivery. This makes the currentiPS cell technology a complicated and expensive technology. Furthermore,the quality of iPS cells generated by the current iPS cell technology isquestionable in terms of resembling human ES cells. These majortechnical problems block the translation of iPS cells from its humanclinical applications.

The main reason that causes these major problems of the current iPS celltechnology is due to the technical challenges of gene delivery andprotein delivery, which suffer low efficiency and hard to controlstoichiometry of the delivered genes with multiple gene/proteindelivery. For iPS cell generation, one has to deliver four genes or fourproteins simultaneously into nuclei of somatic cells to turn on theintracellular auto-regulatory circuits that initiates the “stem geneexpressions” and silences the “somatic gene expressions”, thus somaticcells can be converted into embryonic stem-like cells.

It is common knowledge that the current gene delivery technology,including both virus vector and non-virus approaches, suffers lowefficiency problem for four-gene delivery simultaneously. In addition,there is no guaranty that all four genes are delivered inside cells atan equal stoichiometry. In most cases, the four-gene delivery is random,depending on different delivery vehicles used. To solve this problem, analternative approach has been developed that inserts all four genes intoone virus vector with different linkers between each gene. In this case,only one virus vector is required to be delivered into somatic cells foriPS cell generation, enhanced the delivery efficiency. However, evenwith this approach, a maximum of iPS cell conversion efficiency isachieved only ˜1% for adult somatic cells and could reach <5% forembryonic somatic cells.

In addition to low efficiency of gene delivery, this approach alsosuffers another problem: time consuming. Once the reprogramming geneshave been delivered, they traffic randomly inside cells and only a smallfraction of the genes can reach to nuclei. However, only those somaticcells that have the delivery genes located inside nuclei can bereprogrammed to generate iPS cells. This further significantly reducedthe iPS cell conversion efficiency, in order to solve this problem,repeated gene transfection has been performed to enhance the randomprobability of nuclear incorporation of delivered genes, which is timeconsuming. It takes 7-14 days for the delivered genes to startexpressions and ˜30 days to observe non-iPS cell colony formation. Tocomplete reprogramming, it usually takes 4-8 weeks to generate iPS cellsfrom human adult somatic cells.

For protein-induced cell reprogramming, one has to deliver proteins intothe nuclei of fibroblasts. Both Ding's and Kim's labs engineered thereprogramming proteins by adding a cell-penetrating peptide (CPP,9R-11R) into the C-terminus. Although the CPP-fusion method delivers thereprogramming proteins into the cells, several major drawbacks of theCPP-based protein delivery do exist:

-   -   (1) The CPP-fusion has a high risk of altering the        properties/functions of reprogramming proteins.    -   (2) The CPP has low protein delivery efficiency.    -   (3) The CPP-delivered proteins are sensitive to intracellular        proteases since CPP is peptide based, causing degradation of the        delivered proteins.    -   (4) The CPP does not have a targeting capability to nuclei for        proteins to initiate reprogramming.

Once the proteins are inside cytosol, the intracellular proteases willfirst try to degrade them if they are not folded properly. For thoseproteins that survived intracellular protease degradation, they willrandomly collide with different intracellular compartments and only avery small fraction of proteins can reach nuclei to initiateprotein-induced reprogramming. To enhance the probability of nucleilocation of the reprogramming proteins, both Ding's and Kim's labadopted a repeated circles (7-10 cycles) of protein delivery.

These major drawbacks cause extremely low efficiency of somatic cellconversion into iPS cells (<0.005%). In addition, it also took a longtime for protein initiated reprogramming of fibroblast cells into iPScells. In Ding's paper, it took 5 weeks to observe iPS cell colonyformation from mouse embryonic fibroblast, which is much easy toreprogram into iPS cells as compared with human adult fibroblast. Whenhuman newborn fibroblasts were used by Kim et al to generate iPS cells,it took 8 weeks to observe iPS cell colony.

As discussed above, lack of delivery efficiency, lack of nucleartargeting/random nature of intracellular trafficking and long process ofthe current gene and protein delivery technology make it very hard tocontrol the quality of the generate iPS cells. This is demonstrated byseveral recent reports, indicating that the newly generated iPS cellsdisplay distinct patterns of gene expression from those of human EScells. However, the iPS cells display a very similar gene expressionpattern as human ES cells after 50-60 passages. Based on this results, acontinue reprogramming concept has been proposed during continue passageof iPS cells. Unfortunately, it was also observed that at later passages(50-60 passages), the iPS cells display major chromosomal changes ascompared with the starting somatic cells, making it impossible to usethese IPS cells for human clinical application.

It would therefore be beneficial to develop an iPS cell technology thatcan generate high-quality iPS cells from human adult somatic cellswithin a few days at near 100% conversion efficiency.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

According to the present invention there is provided a piPSC technologywhich can generate high-quality piPS cells from different startingsomatic cells directly using bacterial expressed, recombinantreprogramming proteins.

The present invention provides a piPSC technique that utilizes aQQ-protein delivery technique that enables targeted delivery of thereprogramming protein directly into the nuclei of human somatic cellswithin the first hour after delivery. This initiates cell reprogrammingof somatic cells in 12-hours and completes cell reprogramming within oneweek to generate piPS cells.

The present invention provides piPSC procedures that generate mouse, ratand human piPS cells from adult fibroblasts and other somatic cells withnear 100% conversion efficiency.

The present invention provides procedures to generate high-quality iPScells from many different somatic cells, including mouse primaryfibroblasts, adult mouse fibroblasts, human newborn fibroblasts, humanprimary adult fibroblasts, human adult keratinocytes and human amnioticfluid.

The present invention also provides the procedures to generatehigh-quality iPS cells from different diseased somatic cells, includingrat tumor cells, such as 9L-glioma cells, mouse metastatic breast cancercells, such as 4T1-cells, human breast cancer cell lines, such asMDA-MB-231, human brain tumor cell lines, such as U87 and U251-gliomacells, human primary Stage 4 GBM cells, human primary fibroblasts fromAlzheimer patients with apoE3 or apoE4 isoforms.

The present invention provides a piPSC technology that is simple andonly involves one-step of incubation of somatic cells with reprogrammingproteins, either four reprogramming proteins (Oct4/Sox2/Klf4/c-Myc), orthree reprogramming proteins (Oct4/Sox2/Klf4), or two reprogrammingproteins (Oct4/Sox2), or only one reprogramming proteins (Oct4).

The present invention also use other reprogramming protein combinations,such as Sox2, Oct4 and Nanog (SON), in addition to the traditionalYamanaka's four transcription factors (Oct4/Sox2/Klf4/c-Myc), togenerate piPSCs within 1 week at near 100% efficiency. Since Klf4 andc-Myc are oncogenic proteins and the SON factors are the masterregulator for pluripotency, cell reprogramming using the SON factors maysignificant reduce the mutation rates and significantly enhance thequality of the generated piPSCs that is safe for human clinicalapplications.

The present invention describes a feeder-free piPSC culture conditionthat focuses on monolayer piPSC culture for long-term self-renewal ofpiPSCs. This feeder-free piPSC culture condition avoids mouse feederlayer and solves the major safety concern of the possible cross speciescontamination of the generated piPSCs for future safe human clinicalapplications.

The present invention describes a monolayer whole dish passaging methodthat eliminates colony selection and clonal expansion of traditional iPScell generation and expansion, significantly enhancing the quality ofthe generated piPS cells and accelerating piPS cell expansion.

These and other objects, advantages and features of the invention willbe more fully understood and appreciated by reference to the descriptionof the current embodiment and the drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Other advantages of the present invention will be readily appreciated asthe same becomes better understood by reference to the followingdetailed description when considered in connection with the accompanyingdrawings wherein:

FIG. 1 is a flow chart depicting the protocol of the present invention,showing an outline of each step of this piPSC technology. FIG. 1 alsogives the concentrations of four reprogramming proteins used in cellreprogramming. FIG. 1 further describes cell reprogramming cycles;

FIG. 2A shows the bacterial expression methods used to produce fourreprogramming proteins, including both traditional IPTG-induction methodand high cell-density iPTG-induction method. These methods include keysteps and parameters used in the bacterial expression. Top Right Panelis a Table of the optimized recipes of the medium that are used in thebacterial expression;

FIG. 2B shows the SDS-PAGE and western blot of the purifiedreprogramming proteins for Oct4, Sox2, Kf4 and c-Myc. The yields of thebacterial expression of these four reprogramming proteins are between80-120 mg/liter;

FIG. 3 shows fluorescence images of immunostains of human newbornfibroblast cells after QQ-delivery of reprogramming proteins for 1.5 hr,including Oct4, Sox2, Klf4 and c-Myc, showing nuclear locations of thedelivered proteins. The experimental condition is shown in the upperpanel. Since the fluorescence images were taken for the fibroblast cellsduring protein delivery, reprogramming proteins can be observed in bothcytosol and nuclei of the cells;

FIG. 4 shows a time-course experiment using immunostains with antibodiesagainst several pluripotency markers. HNF was incubated with theQQ-modified four factors for 12 hrs and then switched to a regularmedium for another 108 hours. At 24, 48, 72 and 108 hour, monolayercells were prepared for immunostaining. Fluorescence signals wereobserved inside the cells stained with Oct4 at 24 hour in both nuclearand cytosol locations. However, cytosolic Oct4 significantly reduced at48 hours and only observed in nuclei at 72 hours with reducedfluorescence intensity. At 108 hours, nuclear stains are significantlyenhanced again. This data, for the first time, suggests a switch at72-hour that controls endogenous Oct4 gene expression and degradation ofthe QQ-delivered exogenous Oct4 inside the nuclei. A constant endogenousOct4 expression at 108 hour indicate maintenance of cell reprogramminginduced by four reprogramming proteins, which is confirmed byimmunostains of other pluripotency markers including ALP, Nanog, Rex1and Tra-160. Clearly, fluorescence signals of these pluripotency markersare observed at 24-hour and become much stronger at the later timepoints, indicating the endogenous expression of these pluripotency genesare initiated at 24-hour and well-maintained in the later time points.Strong fluorescence stains of Rex1 and TRA1-60 indicate endogenousprotein expression of late pluripotent markers, suggesting thatprotein-induced cell reprogramming is possibly completed in 4-5 days.This result was confirmed by observation of large numbers of colonyformation at days 6-8 (Insets).

FIG. 5A shows a microscopic image of piPSC colonies six days afterreprogramming with four proteins, showing many piPSC colonies in thissmall view area in a feeder-free medium. In general, there were observed500-1500 piPSC colonies in one cell culture dish;

FIG. 5B shows an enlarged view of one piPSC colony, showing clear edge;

FIG. 5C shows human newborn fibroblast (HNF) was cultured for 24 hourswithout reprogramming protein, serving as a negative control. This panelonly shows nuclei of HNF by DAPI staining without ALP stain;

FIG. 5D shows HNF was cultured with four reprogramming proteins for 3hours and then switched to a medium without reprogramming proteins;

FIG. 5E shows HNF was cultured with four reprogramming proteins for 5hours and then switched to a medium without reprogramming proteins;

FIG. 5F shows HNF was cultured with four reprogramming proteins for 24hours at a lower protein concentration (0.5 μg/ml). The samples weretreated with ALP kits for enzymatic reaction and stained to producefluorescence for ALP protein expression. Panels C-F indicates that thereprogramming condition can be optimized for the best conversionefficiency of piPS cells from HNF. Only ˜30% of cells showed strong ALPstaining in D, whereas the rest of the cells showed either no or weakALP staining. When a 5-hour protein reprogramming was performed,significantly more cells (60%) showed strong ALP staining, althoughcells with weak and no ALP staining were still observed (40%).Experimental conditions were optimized by incubating HNF with a lowerconcentration of the four reprogramming proteins for 24 hrs (F).Virtually every cell was ALP-positive under this condition, suggestingthat cell reprogramming of every single cell is initiated and that it ispossible to generate piPS cells under this one-cycle reprogrammingcondition;

FIG. 6A shows a dish of piPSC colonies at the first passage of #33reprogramming (Left) and a zoomed-in view of the boxed area, showingpiPSC colonies. The colonies were stained with ALP;

FIG. 6B shows fluorescence images of single immunostains (Left Panels)and double immunostains (Right) of monolayer piPSCs using differentpluripotency markers as labeled in each panel. For double stains, weconsidered positive stained cells only when both surface and nuclearmarkers were positive. For those cells that only nuclear or surfacemarker was positive stained, we considered that they were negative.Negative controls of immunostains using the starting HNF were alsoperformed and displayed. ALP and SSEA4 are surface markers and Oct4,Sox2, Nanog and Rex1 are nuclei markers;

FIG. 6C shows bar diagrams showing the conversion efficiency of thepiPSC technique based on six single immunostains (Left) and three doublestains (Right). By manually counting the positive and negative stains ofmore than 300 cells, conversion efficiency was calculated. On the top ofeach bar, the upper number is the conversion efficiency and the lowernumber is the number of cells that were counted for calculation of thecorresponding conversion efficiency;

FIG. 7 shows Fluorescence images of an internal control experiment forimmunostains using six pluripotency markers (as labeled) to a cellmixture of 30% piPSCs (4^(th) passage) and 70% HNFs, showing theexpected dilution of the positively stained cells. Lower Right:Fluorescence images of two colonies with monolayer cells, showing boththe colonies and monolayer cells are positively stained for ALP andSSEA4;

FIG. 8 shows characterization of pluripotency of the generated piPScells using a single colony passaging approach. Briefly, aftercompletion of cell reprogramming, a single colony with a clear edge (A)was chosen and passaged for three more generations using the feeder-freecondition. It was noticed that this single colony started to lose theclear edge in several days after passaging and the cells scrolled out ofthe colony during cell proliferation. Once the cell reached confluency,the cells were lifted and passaged into a new dish, many clear edgedcolonies formed at the second day. However, the cells repeated the aboveprocess during their proliferation. There were observed cells scrolledout of the colonies, while other colonies maintain a clear edge (whitearrows) (B). Using the same piuripotent markers, immunostains wereperformed to both clear edged colonies (C1 and C3) and monolayer cellsthat scrolled out of the colonies (02 and 04) for Oct4 and Nanog asexamples. It is evidenced that both types of cells were positive,suggesting that they are piPSC-like cells. We also passaged the wholedish cells without pick any colonies for three generation. We thencompared the cells with both single colony passage and whole dishmonolayer cell passaging and observed no difference in theimmonostaining using six piuripotent stem cell markers;

FIG. 9 shows fluorescence images of immunostains of the piPSC coloniesof the 30^(th) passage of #19 reprogramming (6.5 months, using the wholedish monolayer cell passaging method) under our feeder-free culturecondition using ALP, Oct4, Nanog, SSEA4, Tra1-60 and Rex1. Nuclei werelabeled with DAPI.

FIG. 10 shows fluorescence images of immunostains of the piPSC coloniesfrom the 19^(th) cell reprogramming at the 6^(th) passage (50 days)using a whole dish passaging approach under our feeder-free piPSCculture condition. Briefly, the whole dish was passaged by lifting-upthe cells in the whole dish and passaging into two dishes withoutpicking up a single colony. The passaged dishes formed hundreds ofcolonies next day. At 6 passage, these piPS cells were characterized,including both piPSC colonies and monolayer cells, using immunostains.Six pluripotent markers, including ALP (early marker), Oct4, Nanog,SSEA4 (intermediate marker), Rex1 and Tra1-60 (late markers), were used.A negative control is also shown with SSEA4 antibody using HNF. The HNFsshow only individual cells without colony formation. This figure showsthat the generated piPSC colonies stained positive for all sixpluripotency markers, suggesting that the generated piPSC colonies arepluripotent stem cells;

FIGS. 11A-11D show characterizations of piPS cells expanded using thewhole dish monolayer cell passaging method;

FIG. 11A shows Right: Heatmaps (log 2) of the TagMan® Stem CellPluripotency Arrays for gene expression in IPS cells at Passenge-1 andpassenger-5 as compared to those of the starting HNFs. Single TaqMan®real-time RT-PCR was further used to confirm the array data. Left: A bardiagram of q RT-PCR to assess gene expression of Oct4, Sox2, and Nanogin piPSC at 1 and 5 passages and HNF cells. Relative gene expressionrepresents fold changes (log 2) relative to that of HNF cells;

FIG. 11B shows SKY chromosome analysis was performed for HNF (17^(th)passage) and piPSCs (10^(m) passage), showing the same karyotype betweenthe generated piPS cells and the parental HNF cells;

FIG. 11C shows Western blot result of the key pluripotent proteins,including three master regulators (Oct4, Sox2 and Nanog) and one latepluripotent marker (Rex1), of piPSCs (5^(th) passage) and starting HNF(Right). A housekeeping protein (Actin) shows that equal amount ofpiPSCs and HNF cells were used for these western blots;

FIG. 11D shows demethylation of the Nanog gene of the piPSCs (˜85%,#33^(rd) reprogramming, 2^(nd) passage) and NHF (˜15%);

FIGS. 12A-12C show differentiation capability of the piPS cells expandedusing the whole dish passaging method. Upper: In vitro spontaneousdifferentiation of piPSCs. Immunostaining images show all three germlayer cells at day 14; neural;

FIG. 12A shows neural (Nestin, ectodermal);

FIG. 12B shows muscle and endothelial-like (Desmin, mesodermal);

FIG. 12C shows endoderm-like cells (AFP, endoderm;

FIGS. 12D-12I shows fluorescence images of in vitro specificdifferentiations of piPSCs to neural lineages;

FIG. 12D shows neurons (Tuj1+, white arrow);

FIG. 12E shows Type I astrocytes (GFAP+);

FIG. 12F shows Type II astrocytes (GFPA+);

FIG. 12G shows Oligodendrocytes (O1+);

FIG. 12H shows neural stem cells (Sox2+);

FIG. 12I shows neural stem cells (Nestin+). Significant cellmorphological differences are observed in all panels. However, cells inFIGS. 12D, 12E, 12F and 12G display typicalneuron/astrocyte/oligodendrocyte morphologies and cells in FIGS. 12H and12I display typical neural stem cell morphology, confirming that theimmunostains are NOT false positive;

FIG. 13A shows Teratoma formation (1). The whole dish passaging methodwas used to generate enough piPSCs for teratoma formation. At passage 3(25-day), piPSCs were suspended in DME containing 10% FBS. SCID (NxGenBiosciences) mice were anesthetized with diethyl ether and the cellsuspension was injected under the kidney capsule and under the muscle.Tumors were clearly visible at the fourth week and were surgicallydissected at the sixth week;

FIG. 13B shows the piPSC-injected kidney was compared with the kidneywithout injection, clearly showing enlargement of the piPSC-injectedkidney;

FIG. 13C shows fluorescence images of immunostains of the piPS coloniesand monolayer cells used for teratoma formation with a whole dishpassaging method. A negative control of the same immunostain with SSEA4using the starting HNF was also showed (Right). The piPSC colonies werebroken into monolayer cells and then performed immunostains. The resultsindicated that virtually every cell displayed positive stains for allsix pluripotency markers, suggesting a high conversion efficiency usingwhole dish passaging method. Only 200,000 piPS cells were transplantedinto the kidney capsule of nude mice;

FIG. 14 shows Teratoma formation (2). At the sixth week, the animalswere surgically dissected. The kidney tissue samples were fixed in PBScontaining 4% formaldehyde, and embedded in paraffin. Sections werestained with hematoxylin and eosin (H & E). H & E staining wereperformed for teratoma formation derived from piPS cells. Teratomas werewell developed from a single injection site after cells weretransplanted under the kidney capsules of SCiD mice. The resultingteratomas contained various tissues representing ectoderm, mesoderm andendoderm differentiation. Histology data of the tissue slides indicatedthese teratoma contained tissues from all three primary germ layers,including neural tissues and epidermal tissues (ectoderm), striatedmuscle and cartilage (mesoderm), and intestinal-like epithelium tissues(endoderm), confirming that the generated piPS cells using whole dishpassaging exhibit pluripotency in vivo;

FIG. 15 shows the piPS cells derived from individual patient can be usedto generate disease model for that patient. Briefly, primary dermalfibroblasts can be obtained from a patient via skin biopsy and thesefibroblasts can be used to generate piPS cells by delivery of fourreprogramming proteins. The generated piPS cells can be either expandedor led to specific lineage of adult stem cells, which can be furtherdifferentiated into diseased tissues. Thus, these cells can be used togenerate disease model since they are generated from an individualpatient with a specific disease. Thus, one can study this specificdisease in a dish for this individual patient;

FIG. 16 shows the piPS cells can be used for drug screen and drugtoxicity test as illustrated in this figure. For those patients who havegenetic diseases, an extra step may have to take which include geneticrepair by homologous recombination; and

FIG. 17 shows the piPS cells can be used for patient-based stem celltherapy. Briefly, primary dermal fibroblasts can be obtained from apatient and these fibroblasts can be used to generate piPS cells bydelivery of four reprogramming proteins. The generated piPS cells can beeither expanded or led to specific lineage of adult stem cells. ThesepiPS cells and adult stem cells can be transplanted into individualpatients to treat specific disease. For those patients who have geneticdiseases, an extra step may have to take which include genetic repair byhomologous recombination before patient transplantation.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The present invention provides a protein induced piuripotent stem cell(piPSC) technology. The present invention provides the use of this piPSCtechnology which can generate high-quality iPS cells from differentstarting somatic cells directly using bacterial expressed, recombinantreprogramming proteins.

The piPSC technology of the present invention is simple and onlyinvolves one-step of incubation of somatic cells with reprogrammingproteins. The reprogramming proteins can be any proteins known to thoseof skill in the art to be capable of performing the recited function.Examples of such proteins include, but are not limited to, fourreprogramming proteins (Oct4/Sox2/Klf4/c-Myc), or three reprogrammingproteins (Oct4/Sox2/Klf4), or two reprogramming proteins (Oct4/Sox2), oronly one reprogramming proteins (Oct4).

The piPSC technology of the present invention also use otherreprogramming protein combinations, such as Sox2, Oct4 and Nanog (SON),or Nanog/Oct4, or Nanog only, in addition to the traditional Yamanaka'sfour transcription factors (Oct4/Sox2/Klf4/c-Myc), to generate piPSCs.Since Klf4 and c-Myc are oncogenic proteins and the SON factors are themaster regulator for pluripotency, cell reprogramming using the SONfactors can reduce the mutation rates and significantly enhance thequality of the generated piPSCs that is safe for human clinicalapplications.

The piPSC technology of the present invention utilizes a QQ-proteindelivery technique that enables targeted delivery of the reprogrammingprotein directly into the nuclei of human somatic cells within the firsthour after delivery. This initiates cell reprogramming of somatic cellsin 12-hours and completes cell reprogramming within one week to generatepiPS cells. Additionally, the procedures generate mouse, rat and humanpiPS cells from adult fibroblasts and other somatic cells with near 100%conversion efficiency.

The piPSC technology provides a universal procedure that not only can beused to efficiently generate protein-induced pluripotent stem cells withthe Yamanaka's factors or the SON factors, but also can be broadly usedto generate adult stem cells, such as neural stem cells, epithelial stemcells, skin stem cells, mesenchymal stem cells and hematopoietic stemcells, as well as trans-differentiations to directly generatecardiomyocytes, neuron, brown adipocytes, insulin secretion cells andother types of terminal differentiated cells from adult somatic cellsusing different sets of reprogramming proteins.

The piPSC technology can be used to generate high-quality iPS cells frommany different somatic cells, including but not limit to; mouse primaryfibroblasts of healthy animals, adult mouse fibroblasts, human newbornfibroblasts, human primary adult fibroblasts, human adult keratinocytesand human amniotic fluid. High-quality iPS cells can also be generatedfrom different diseased somatic cells, including but not limited to: rattumor cells, such as 9L-glioma cells, mouse metastatic breast cancercells, such as 4T1-cells, human breast cancer cell lines, such asMDA-MB-231, human brain tumor cell lines, such as U87 and U251-gliomacells, human primary Stage 4 GBM cells, human primary fibroblasts fromAlzheimer patients with apoE3 and apoE4 isoforms.

The present invention describes a feeder-free piPSC culture conditionthat focuses on monolayer piPSC culture for long-term self-renewal ofpiPSCs. This feeder-free piPSC culture condition avoids mouse feederlayer and solves one of the major safety concerns of the possible crossspecies contamination of the generated piPSCs for future safe humanclinical applications.

The present invention describes a new piPSC passaging method: whole dishpassaging, for long-term self-renewal and expansion of piPSCs, since theconversion efficiency of this piPSC technology reaches near 100%. Thisnew piPSC passaging method focus on passaging and expansion of monolayerpiPSCs and it is simple and fast. It also avoids colony selection duringcell reprogramming, colony picking and clonal expansion, maysignificantly reduce the mutation rates and enhance the quality of thegenerated piPSCs that is safe for human clinical applications.

The present invention can be used to produce large amount bacterialexpressed recombinant reprogramming proteins, including but not limitingto: Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc, Lin28, Nanog, BMP4 and other reprogrammingproteins.

More specifically, the present invention is based on the QQ-proteintransduction technology and an in vivo refolding technology as disclosedin U.S. Pat. No. 8,722,348, incorporated herein by reference. The QQreagents have the ability of delivering multiple proteins simultaneouslyor consecutively into cells at near millimolar concentration and thecapability of targeted delivery of proteins into the correctedintracellular compartments. In addition, QQ-reagents protect proteinsfrom proteases inside cells. The delivered proteins are properlyrefolded and post-translationally modified by the intracellularmachinery and follow the same intracellular trafficking and secretionpathways as their endogenous counterparts. Thus, the QQ-proteintransduction is a physiologically relevant protein transductiontechnology.

The present invention extends the QQ-protein delivery to piPS celltechnology by optimization of the QQ-reagent recipe. The new recipeefficiently delivers reprogramming proteins into nuclei of the startingsomatic cells. Accordingly, the amount of modification of targetproteins with the new recipe can be adjusted by altering theQQ-compositions to obtain the best delivery efficiency into differentsomatic cells for specific reprogramming proteins for cellreprogramming.

The present invention also provides direct experimental evidence thatcell reprogramming can be initiated within several hours afterQQ-protein delivery, thus the pluripotent genes start to endogenously beexpressed during this period of time. Additionally, the presentinvention also provides direct experimental evidence that cellreprogramming can be completed within 1 week after QQ-protein delivery,thus the genes of the completed reprogramming markers start toendogenously expressed during this period of time.

The method and products of the present invention are an efficient andflexible way to optimize the composition and concentrations ofreprogramming proteins for optimization of the quality of generated iPScells using QQ-protein delivery.

Another benefit is that the piPSC technology presented here generatestissue-specific piPS cells using reprogramming proteins without geneticmanipulations of the parental cells. In addition, this piPSC technologyuses the “SON” proteins, the master ESC regulators, for cellreprogramming, and removes the oncogenic KLF4 and c-MYC proteins,solving the major safety hurdles for future human clinical applicationsfor a possible personalized disease therapy.

The piPSC technology can be used in human clinic applications, includingregeneration medicine and cell replacement therapy, generation of theiPS cell banks from individual patients with genetic disorders, diseasemodels based on piPS cells from individual patients and testing ofefficacy of different drugs, including small molecule drugs, proteindrugs, DNA drugs, RNA drugs, carbonhydrate drugs and lipid-based drugs.

The present invention describes the application of this piPSC technologyin human clinic applications to treat different human diseases,including, but not limited to, cancer, heart diseases, strokes,diabetes, obesity, Alzheimer's diseases, Parkinson's disease,amyotrophic lateral-sclerosis, myocardial infaction, muscular dystrophy,CMT-1A, spinal cord injury, traumatic brain injury, learning defects,missing teeth, wound healing, bone marrow translantation,osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, baldness, blindness, deafness,Crohn's disease and genetic diseases, and other similar diseases.

Most importantly, greater than 85±4% conversion efficiency has beenachieved. The generated piPSCs display characteristics of humanembryonic stem cells (hESCs) and can be expanded stably and homogenouslyfor 6-months under a feeder-free condition. These piPSCs also have thepotential to differentiate into the three germ layers both in vitro andin vivo.

Such an efficiency of this piPSC technology is based on astate-of-the-art QQ-protein delivery technology. The QQ-reagent protectsthe delivered proteins from degradation by intracellular proteases andhas targeting capability to specific intracellular compartments based onthe signal sequences carried by the delivered proteins. The QQ-deliverywas applied to protein-induced cell reprogramming of HNFs, whichgenerated piPSCs within 1 week with greater than 85±4% conversionefficiency. Such high conversion efficiency allows for elimination ofthe colony selection during cell reprogramming and clonal expansion formaintaining a pure population of piPSCs, thus dramatically speeding upthe entire procedure of piPSC generation and expansion. A method ofmonolayer piPSC passaging was developed using a feeder-free conditionfor expansion of the generated piPSCs. This piPSC technology may alsosignificantly enhance the quality of piPSCs for safe human clinicalapplications by reduction of the mutation rates during traditionalcolony picking and clonal expansion.

The piPSC technology of the present invention includes a very highefficient bacterial expression method that can be used to produce purereprogramming proteins at a very high yield (80-120 mg/liter) and therecipes of the media that was used for bacterial expression. Thissignificantly reduced the cost of this piPSC technology.

The piPSC technology of the present invention utilizes an in vivoprotein refolding technology, which directly delivers the bacterialexpressed reprogramming proteins into the somatic cells using theQQ-protein delivery technology for refolding by the mammalian cellularfolding machinery. Thus, this piPSC technology skips the step ofcomplicated and inefficient in vitro protein refolding of the bacterialexpressed reprogramming proteins, thus making this piPSC technology amuch simple and inexpensive technology.

The piPSC technology of the present invention utilizes QQ-proteindelivery technology to directly deliver reprogramming proteins into thenuclei of somatic cells to initiate and maintaining cell reprogramming.There has been shown that this piPSC technology could specificallydeliver reprogramming protein into the nuclei of virtually every singlesomatic cell in 1.5 hour after QQ-protein delivery.

The piPSC technology of the present invention can also initiate cellreprogramming in first 24 hours after protein delivery and the cellreprogramming could be completed in 5 days to generate piPS cells, whichfor the first time demonstrates that cell reprogramming is not astochastic process, but defined and repeatable process to generate piPScells from somatic cells using QQ-protein delivery technology.

The piPSC technology of the present invention includes a feeder-freecell culture condition to passage the generated piPSCs. Described hereinis the detailed procedure of this feeder-free condition and alsoreported the potential colony changes in shape and morphology. Usingthis feeder-free condition, more than 30 passages of the generated piPScells have successfully passed for more than 6 months.

The piPSC technology of the present invention describes a passagingmethod which is distinctly different from the traditional passagingmethod that picks up a single colony for passaging. Since this piPSCtechnology converts nearly 100% somatic cells into piPS cells, there wasdeveloped a whole dish passaging method that passes the cells of thewhole dish into new dishes for passaging. This allows one to avoidcolony picking and clonal expansion and may significantly reduce themutation rates of the generated piPS cells. This solved the majorproblem of generation of enough piPS cells for applications and maysignificantly enhance the quality of piPS cells for safe human clinicalapplications.

The piPSC technology of the present invention suggests a procedure fordeveloping disease models for individual patients. This is one of theimportant applications of this piPSC technology that allows one to studyhuman diseases in a dish.

The piPSC technology of the present invention suggests a procedure fordrug screen and toxicity test of the drugs for individual patients. Thisis another important application of this piPSC technology thatpotentially allows one to develop new drugs in a dish on an individualpatient basis.

The piPSC technology of the present invention suggests a patient-basedstem cell therapy to treat human diseases, including but not limit toAlzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, stroke, learning defects,traumatic brain injury, would healing, spinal cord injury,osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease, multiple sitescancers, diabetes, muscular dystrophy, myocardial ufraction, amyotrophiclateral sclerosis, baldness, blindness and deafness. This is the mostimportant application of this piPSC technology that potentially allowsus to treat many human diseases on an individual patient basis.

Three technologies were developed to solve the most challenging problemsof the previously available or current iPSC technology. Thesetechnologies include an efficient bacterial expression system, allowinga gram/liter quantity of pure recombinant protein production; An in vivoprotein refolding technique to efficiently refold bacterial expressedproteins using intracellular folding machinery of mammalian cells; andthe QQ-protein transduction technology that has a targeting capabilityto specific intracellular organelles, including nucleus.

Using the first technology, there were prepared bacterial expressedOct4, Sox2, Klf4 and c-Myc proteins at yields of 80-120 mg per one-literexpression, which are confirmed by western blots. This makes recombinantreprogramming protein much cheaper and affordable. The secondtechnology—an in vivo protein refolding technology allows one to skipthe in vitro refolding step adopted by Ding et al, which is inefficient,expensive and complicated. Generally, this method delivers the bacterialexpressed proteins into mammalian cells using the QQ-protein deliverytechnology. The intracellular folding machinery could efficiently refoldthe bacterial expressed proteins.

The Third technology is an advanced QQ-protein delivery technology,which has several features, ensuring the physiological relevance of thisprotein delivery technology:

-   -   (1) QQ-reagent non-covalently associates with proteins and no        tags are added to the delivered proteins.    -   (2) QQ-reagent masks/protects the delivered proteins from        intracellular proteases (high metabolic stability).    -   (3) QQ-reagent specifically delivers proteins to their target        compartment based on the sequence localization signals carried        by the delivered proteins (Targeting capability).    -   (4) QQ-reagent has a high efficiency of protein delivery, up to        millimolar (mM) intracellular concentration.

The QQ-reagents are polyethyleneimine (PEi)-based cocktails, with otherkey ingredients, such as lipids and enhancers. They can be formulatedfor specific applications. The QQ-reagent binds to the deliveredproteins non-covalently, which coats a layer of the QQ-reagent on thesurface of the delivered protein. This MASKS the protein fromintracellular protease degradation. The QQ-reagent DOES graduallydissociate from the delivered proteins once inside the cells. Theseunique features of the QQ-reagents make the delivered proteinsindistinguishable from their endogenous counterparts inside the cells.Once the delivered proteins reach their targeted compartments, thecell's machinery behaves as if they were the endogenous counterparts. Itwas demonstrated that the QQ-delivered proteins folds andpost-translationai modifies properly inside the cells and they followsthe identical intracellular trafficking and secretion pathway as theirendogenous counterparts.

A patent application, incorporated herein by reference, of theQQ-protein delivery technology and the in vivo protein refoldingtechnology has been submitted on May 28, 2008. These three advancedtechnologies SOLVED the major problems of the current iPSC technology.This allows the development of a piPSC technology, for generatinghigh-quality iPS cells from many different somatic cells usingreprogramming proteins within 1 week with near 100% conversionefficiency. In addition, the iPSC technology is a simple and affordabletechnology.

More specifically, using the state-of-the-art QQ-protein deliverytechnique, the bacterial expressed recombinant reprogramming proteinsare directly delivered into the nucleus of virtually every startinghuman newborn fibroblast (HNF). The recombinant reprogramming proteinsare properly refolded by the intracellular folding machinery andinitiate cell reprogramming within 24 hours after protein delivery. Thiscell reprogramming is well maintained and can be completed within 1week. The generated piPSCs display characteristics of human embryonicstem cells (ESCs), can be expanded stably and homogenously for over 30generations in a feeder-free condition and have the differentiationpotentials both in vitro and in vivo into three major germ layers. Mostimportantly, this piPSC technique generates piPSCs from HNFs with greatthan 85±4% conversion efficiency. Such a high reprogramming efficiencymay significantly enhance the quality of the generated piPSCs that aresafe for future human clinical applications.

The Examples below are included to demonstrate preferred embodiments ofthe invention. It should be appreciated by those of skill in the artthat the techniques disclosed in the Examples represent techniques andcompositions discovered by the inventors to function well in thepractice of embodiments disclosed herein, and thus can be considered toconstitute preferred modes for its practice. However, those of skill inthe art should, in light of the present disclosure, appreciate that manychanges can be made in the specific embodiments which are disclosed andstill obtain a like or similar result without departing from the spiritand scope of embodiments disclosed herein.

Examples

Materials and Methods

Plasmids Construction.

Four genes, Oct4 (NP_002692), Sox2 (NP_003097), Klf4 (NP_004226), Nanog(NM_024865.2) and c-Myc (NP_002458), were subcloned into a sHT-pET30abacterial expression vector, in which a short his-tag: ‘HHHHHHSS’ (SEQID NO: 1) replaced the long his-tag. A factor Xa (IEGR) cleavage site isbetween the short his-tag and the coding genes. The sequences of thebacterial expression vectors were confirmed by DNA sequencing.

Protein Expression and Purification.

The DNA constructs of reprogramming proteins were transformed into E.Colt strain BL-21 (DE3) individually. A single colony was selected forbacterial protein expression. After brief optimization, proteinexpressions were induced by 0.5 mM IPTG and continued to culture at 18C.° for 16 hours. The cells were harvested in the binding buffercontaining 6M urea and sonicated three times. The recombinant proteinswere purified using a His-Bind Resin column (Novagen) according to themanual with modifications. The purified proteins were dialyzed againstwater and lyophilized into protein powders.

Qq-Modification.

The reprogramming proteins were dissolved in 50 mM sodium phosphate pH7.4 with 2 M urea. QQ-regents were freshly prepared based on the recipe.Briefly, the QQ-reagent is a cocktail of polyethylenimine (PEI) 2,000(2K, 0.2-1.0 mg/ml) and DOTAP/DOPE (25-50 μg/ml). The QQ-modification ofreprogramming proteins was performed by mixing the QQ-cocktail with aprotein (Oct4/Sox2: 1 mg/ml; Klf4/c-Myc: 0.5 mg/ml; Nanog: 1 mg/ml) for4-hours at room temperature or overnight in a cold room.

Cell Culture and Cell Reprogramming.

HNFs were cultured on a 35×10-mm cell culture dish till 70-80% confluent(5×10⁴ cells) in the DMEM medium with 10% FBS. The QQ-modifiedreprogramming proteins were also mixed with DMEM medium with 10% FBS(Invitrogen) and incubated at room temperature for 10 minutes. The finalconcentration of Oct4, Sox2 and Klf4 were 0.2-0.5 μg/ml while c-Myc was0.02-0.05 μg ml. To start reprogram, the cell culture medium wasreplaced by the reprogramming medium (DMEM medium with 10% FBS, 0.1 mMnon-essential amino acids, and 2 mM L-glutamine). The proteinconcentration was gradually reduced as the following: In cycle 1,Oct4/Sox2/KIf4 were 0.5 μg/ml and c-Myc was 0.05 μg/ml. In cycle 2,protein concentration was reduced by half. In cycle 3, proteinconcentration was further reduced by half. Each cycle contained 3-12hour incubation with QQ-modified proteins, plus 12-21 hour incubationwithout reprogramming proteins. After 3 cycles, the cells were culturedin DMEM medium with 20% KSR, 0.1 mM 2-ME, 2 mM L-glutamine, 0.1 mMnon-essential amino acids, supplemented with 10 ng/ml bFGF (Stemgent)for post-reprogramming culture for 48-hours. This 48-hourpost-reprogramming culture medium was saved as the conditional medium.At the end of post-reprogramming culture, the cells were completelyconfluent. A confluent dish after post-reprogramming culture wouldpromote the colony formation in a feeder free condition.

Generation of piPSCs Under a Feeder-Free Condition.

A new dish (0.2% gelatin coated) was pretreated with the conditionalmedium for 15 minutes. The reprogrammed cells were dissociated asmonolayer cell suspension using trypsin (0.05%) and transferred into thenew dishes. The cells were cultured in a medium that contained KnockoutDMEM with 20% KSR (Invitrogen), 10 ng/ml bFGF, 0.2 mM 2-ME (Sigma), 0.1mM non-essential amino acid (Invitrogen) and 2 mM L-glutamin(Invitrogen). The next day, hundreds of clear edged colonies wereobserved. The cells were passaged every 5-7 days when the dish was80-90% confluent. To compare pluripotency of the piPSC populations,either a single piPSC colony was picked for passaging (single colonypassaging) or the cells of half a dish were passaged (whole dishpassaging). Cell expansion was continued using both passaging methodsfor up to 10^(th) passage (2 months) and immunostaining was performed.During piPSC passaging, medium was changed every other day by replacinghalf of the medium with fresh feeder-free medium. Feeder-free medium wasprepared every other week and kept it in a cold room.

Dosage of Reprogramming Proteins Versus piPSC Colony Formation.

Different concentrations of reprogramming proteins were used to generatepiPSC colonies. A two-cycle reprogramming was performed in triplicate ateach protein concentration. After reprogramming and post reprogrammingincubation (48 hour), the whole dish was passaged into 60×15 mm dishes.The number of colonies was counted under a microscope for threeconsecutive days starting at passage 2.

Nuclear Targeting of Reprogramming Proteins.

HNFs were seeded into 4 wells one day before experiment. HNFs wereincubated with QQ-modified Oct4, Sox2, Klf4 and c-Myc (1-μg/ml)individually for 1.5 hours at 37° C. The cells were washed with PBS 3times and fixed with 4% formaldehyde then washed 3 times with PBS. Thecells were blocked and permeabilized with 2% sheep serum containing 0.2%triton for 2 hours and incubated with primary antibodies with 2% sheepserum PBS overnight in a cold room. Cells were washed 3-times with 1%serum and then incubated with secondary antibodies (1:300 dilution) atroom temperature for 2 hours. Cells were washed 3 times using 1%serum-PBS and subjected to fluorescence imaging.

Human Stem Cell Pluripotency Gene Array Analysis.

Total RNA was extracted from HNFs and iPSCs at 1^(st) and 5^(th)passages using the mirVana miRNA isolation kit (Ambion, USA). TaqMan®Stem Cell Pluripotency Arrays (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.,USA), containing 92 well-defined validated genes, were used for geneexpression analysis. Reverse transcription reaction, real-time RT-PCRand data analysis to obtain Ct values were performed according to themanufacturer's protocol. Briefly, cDNA was reversely transcribed from1.0 ug total RNA, respectively, using random primers from the HighCapacity cDNA Archive Kit (Applied Biosystems). RT-PCR was carried outon an ABI Veriti Thermal cycler (Applied Biosystems). 500 ng of cDNA wasmixed with TaqMan® Universal PCR Master Mix per reservoir, two reservoirfor each sample. The sample-specific PCR mix was loaded into the TaqMan®Stem Cell Pluripotency Array, each reservoir 100 ul. After centrifuge,the TaqMan array was then run on a 7900HT system (Applied Biosystems)for quantitative real-time PCR analysis. Raw Ct values were calculatedusing the SDS software version 2.3 and RQ manager 1.2 (AppliedBiosystems) applying automatic baseline settings and a threshold of0.05. For array data analysis, only those miRNAs with a Ct value equalto or below 36 were taken into account. Raw Ct values were imported intoRealTime StatMiner 4.2 (Integromics, Inc.). GAPDH was selected asendogenous control gene to determine the relative expression of thecandidate genes. Gene expressions of HNFs were chosen as calibrator toidentify the differentially expressed specific markers of piPSCs. The−ΔΔCt was calculated and heat map analysis was performed withhierarchical clustering. Single TaqMan® real-time RT-PCR was furtherused to confirm the array data.

Real-Time RT-PCR.

Total RNA was isolated from the human newborn fibroblast and piPSCs(1^(st) and 5^(th) passages) using the mirVana miRNA isolation kit(Ambion, USA) according to the manufacturer's specifications. For eachRT reaction, 200 ng RNA was used for cDNA syntheses using High-CapacitycDNA Reverse Transcription kits (Applied Biosystem, USA). PCR reactionwas done in the HT-7900 system. Results were the average measured intriplicate and normalized to a control gene GAPDH. The relativeexpression of target genes was calculated using the comparativethreshold cycle method. Expression differences were generated bycalculating −ΔΔCt.

Western Blot.

The purified proteins or piPSC lysates were separated by 10% SDS-PAGE inreducing conditions and blotted onto nitrocellulose membrane. Theantibodies against human Oct4 (Santa Cruz), Sox2 (Santa Cruz), KLF4 (R&DSYSTEMS) and c-Myc (R&D SYSTEMS) were used to detect the proteins.Secondary antibodies against mouse IgG (Santa Cruz), Rabbit IgG (SantaCruz) and Goat IgG (Sigma) were used respectively. The protein signalswere detected by SuperSignal West Pigmo Chemiluminescent Substrate(Thermo Scientific, USA).

Embryonic Body (EB) Formation and Spontaneous In Vitro Differentiation.

piPSCs were trypsinized into monolayer cells and cultured in suspensionon low adhesion plates (Corning) in DMEM medium with 10% FBS, containing0.1 mM 2-ME. EBs were observed in several days in suspension. Forspontaneous differentiation, medium was changed every 2 days for 10 to15 days. Spontaneous differentiations were examined by immunostaining ofrepresentative lineage specific markers with indicated antibodies. Forspecific neural linage differentiation, medium was changed to a neuralinducing medium at day 3 after EB formation: DMEM with 5% FBS containing20 ng/ml neural growth factor (PROSpect). For specific cardiomyocytelinage differentiation, medium was changed to a special medium at day 3after EB formation.

Cytochemistry and Immuno-Fluorescence Assay.

ALP assay (Vector Red ALP substrate Kit I) was performed according tomanufacturer. Immunocytochemistry was performed using standard protocolfor pluripotency and differentiation markers. Briefly, piPSCs and HNFswere seeded in 8-well culture chambers and fixed with 4% paraformdehyde(Sigma), washed three times with PBS. The cells were incubated in 0.2%tritonX and 5% sheep serum (Sigma) for 2 hours at room temperature.Next, the cells were incubated with primary antibody at 4° C. overnight:Stem cell marker antibody kit (R&D Systems, 1:300), anti-Tra-1-60(Stemgent, 1:300) and anti-Rex1 (Stemgent, 1:300) were used forpluoripotency markers. For in vitro differentiation, Tuj1 (Covance,1:500), Nestin (Millipore, Neural Stem cell Characterization Kit, 1:10),MF20 (Development Studies Hybrioloma Bank, Super, 1:300), APF (ThermoScientific, 1:200), Desmin (Thermo Scientific, 1:300) and Brachyury(Santa Cruz, 1:300) were used. After washing three times in 1% serum PBSfor 10 minutes, cells were incubated with secondary antibodies (1:400 in2% serum PBS) for 2 hours in room temperature: Alexa Fluor 555 donkeyanti-goat IgG (1:2000, Invitrogen), Alexa Fluro 488 donkey anti-rabbitIgG (1:2000, Invitrogen) and Alexa Fluro 488 donkey anti-chicken IgG(1:2000, Invitrogen). Nuclei were detected by DAPI using the DAPIcooperated mounting medium (VactorLab). Fluorescence images were takenusing an ApoTom (Zeiss) Axl0plan 2 Imaging System.

Teratoma Formation.

The whole dish passaging was used to expand piPSCs for teratomaformation. At passage 3, piPSCs were suspended in DMEM containing 10%FBS. SCID or athymic Balb/c mice (NxGen Biosciences) were anesthetizedwith diethyl ether and the cell suspension was injected under the kidneycapsule and under the muscle. Tumors were clearly visible at the fourthweek and were surgically dissected at the sixth week after injection.Tissue samples were fixed in PBS containing 4% formaldehyde, andembedded in paraffin. Sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin.

DNA Methylation Study.

Genomic DNA was isolated from both HNFs and piPSCs using DNeasy Blood &Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, Calif.) and fragmented by sonication toshear the DNA into small fragment (400-1000 bp in size). Methylated DNAwas isolated from the fragmented genomic DNA via binding to themethyl-CpG binding domain of human BD2 protein using a MethylMinerMethylated DNA Enrichment Kit (Invitrogen) using a protocol suggested bythe manufacture. A qRT-PCR was performed using a StepOne Plus Real timePCR system (Applied Biosystems) to determine the Ct value of the Nanoggene promoter region sequence for each of the methylated DNA samplesusing a pair of primers (Nanog gene promoter region: −1519 to 1498 and−1307 to −1327) for amplifying a 192 bp DNA fragment. As an internalcontrol, the Ct value of the β-actin gene was also determined for eachof the methylated DNA samples using a pair of primers (Exon 5) foramplifying a 154 bp DNA fragment. The level of the Nanog gene promoterregion DNA in the HNFs was counted as 100% and the level of the Nanoggene promoter region DNA in piPSCs was calculated as fold changerelative to that of the HNFs using a StepOne software v2.1 (AppliedBiosystems).

Sky Analysis.

Cell cultures and chromosome preparation: Cells were harvested followinga 2 hour treatment of Colcemid (0.1 μg/ml). After conventional hypotonictreatment (0.4% KCl, 37° C. for 10 minutes), chromosome preparationswere fixed with 3:1 methanol: acetic acid (3×) and the slides wereprepared by the air-dry method. Following pepsin treatment and fixationwith formaldehyde, slides were subject to dehydration. The chromosomalslides were then denatured in 70% formamide and 2×SSC and hybridizedwith denatured human painting probes (SKYPaint) for over 48 hours at 37°C. Signals were detected following a series of steps of slide washing.DAP1 staining was also used for visualizing the chromosome/nuclei. 50mitotic figures with good hybridization quality were randomly capturedusing CCD camera. Following image acquisition, chromosomes werekaryotyped with Applied Spectral Image software.

Results

A Simple piPSC Protocol.

This piPSC technique contains steps of preparation of bacteriallyexpressed reprogramming proteins, QQ-modifications and 1-5 cycles ofcell reprogramming, depending on the different starting cells (FIG. 1 ).An efficient bacterial expression method was reported recently (FIG.2A), allowing for production of 80-120 mg of pure recombinant proteinsfor Oct4, Sox2, Klf4 and c-Myc from one-liter of bacterial expression(FIG. 2B). Since the bacterially expressed recombinant proteins may notfold properly, an in vitro protein refolding method was used in theprior piPSC protocol by Zhou et al, which was inefficient and anadditional purification step was required. However, an in vivo proteinrefolding technique was recently developed that directly deliversbacterially expressed recombinant reprogramming proteins into mammaliancells using the QQ-protein delivery, where the intracellular foldingmachinery efficiently refolds the proteins. The piPSC protocol appliesthe principle of this in vivo protein refolding technique. The fourreprogramming proteins were delivered into the nuclei of HNFs usingQQ-protein delivery technique for refolding and function to initiatecell reprogramming (FIG. 3 ). Each reprogramming cycle is 24 hours: HNFswere incubated with four reprogramming proteins for 3-12 hours, allowingprotein delivery into the cells, followed by switching to a regular cellculture medium for 12-21 hours (FIG. 1 ).

For protein-induced cell reprogramming, the delivered transcriptionfactors are required to reach the nuclei to initiate cell reprogramming.QQ-delivered reprogramming proteins reached the nuclei of virtuallyevery cell 1.5 hours after delivery (FIG. 3 ). The delivered proteinswere also observed in the cytosol since fluorescence imaging wasperformed during protein delivery. This result shows thatprotein-induced cell reprogramming may be initiated within a few hoursafter protein delivery. It was demonstrated that protein-induced cellreprogramming of HNFs was initiated within the first 24 hours andcompleted within 5-days, as judged by immunostaining using latepluripotency markers such as Rex1 and Tra1-60 (FIG. 4 ). This wasfurther confirmed by colony formation in the dishes of cellreprogramming at days 8 (FIG. 4 ).

Optimizations of the piPSC Protocol.

Protein concentrations were first optimized using the number of alkalinephosphatase (ALP) positive colonies as the criteria for optimization.The data indicated low conversion efficiency with a high concentrationof reprogramming proteins. When a 5 μg/ml protein concentration wasused, only a few ALP-positive colonies were found. A lower concentrationgenerated more ALP-positive colonies, with a concentration ofreprogramming proteins at 0.25-0.50 μg/ml generating the mostALP-positive colonies in 5 days (Table 1). This result is supported bythe published data of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs), indicatingthat the concentration of Oct4 inside ESCs is critical, because a higherOct4 concentration causes ES cell differentiation, whereas a lower Oct4concentration fails to maintain pluripotency. In addition, c-Myc isoncogenic protein that may cause higher rates of mutations andparticipate in tumorigenesis at high intracellular concentrations. Anoptimized concentration of four reprogramming proteins is critical tothe quality of the generated piPS cells. The QQ-protein delivery permitsus to control the concentration of the delivered proteins inside thenuclei of HNFs (Table 1), allowing quick optimizations of proteinconcentrations.

Optimizations of the Cell Reprogramming Protocol were Also Performed.

The initial protocol (3-hour reprogramming) was repeated with only onecycle of reprogramming and the cells were immunostained using theanti-ALP antibody at the end of the cycle. Only ˜30% of HNFs showedstrong ALP staining (FIG. 5D). As a control, HNF cultured with a regularculture medium without reprogramming proteins for 24 hours showed no ALPstaining (FIG. 5C). When a 5-hour reprogramming was performed,significantly more cells (˜60%) showed strong ALP staining (FIG. 5E). A24 hour continue culture of HNFs with four reprogramming proteins (0.1g/ml) indicated that virtually every HNF cell was ALP-positive (FIG.5F), suggesting possible very high conversion efficiency of cellreprogramming. This data provide direct evidence of the enablingcapability of the QQ-protein delivery in protein-induced cellreprogramming.

The optimized piPSC protocol usually delivered Oct4/Sox2/Klf4/c-Myc at a1:1:1:0.1 ratio with a protein concentration of 0.5 μg/ml for Oct4 forthe first cycle and reduced protein concentration by half in the cyclethereafter. 1-5 cycles of reprogramming were usually performed,depending on the starting human somatic cells. For HNF, 2-3 cycles ofreprogramming was enough to generate piPS cells. At the end ofreprogramming, the culture medium was switched to a feeder-freemaintaining medium containing FGF (10 ng/ml) for 2 days. The cells werelifted up and transferred into new dishes, which were pre-treated withthe conditioned medium for 10 minutes. The cells were cultured with halfconditioned medium and half new feeder-free maintaining medium. At day5-6, many clear edged colonies were observed (FIGS. 5A and 5B). Theentire dish contains 500-1500 piPSC colonies from 10⁵ starting cells. Ina recent study using protein extracts from mouse ES cells, similarpiPS-like cells were also made in 5 days but with much lower efficiency.

High Conversion Efficiency.

This piPSC technique gives high conversion efficiency of piPSCs fromhuman somatic cells. Many colonies were usually obtained in the first orsecond passage. In FIG. 6A, the left panel shows many colonies in adish. The colonies were stained with a red ALP kit; the right panelshows the zoomed-in image of the boxed area, displaying ALP-stainedpiPSC colonies. To assess conversion efficiency, monolayer piPSCs wereintentionally prepared from colonies and immunostaining was performedwith monolayer cells using ALP, SSEA4, Nanog, Oct4, Rex1 and Sox2antibodies (FIG. 6B). Immunostaining was also performed on the startingHNFs, showing negative stains (FIG. 6B). To estimate conversionefficiency, a minimum of 10 randomly selected fields was scored forpositively and negatively stained cells (>400 cells) in a double-blindedmanner to minimize subjective interpretations after fluorescenceimaging. The conversion efficiency was then calculated by the ratio ofpositively stained cells/total counted cells. In FIG. 6C, the rightpanel shows the results, indicating that the average reprogrammingefficiency is between 80-91%. This result is consistent with theprevious time course, suggesting that this piPSC technology can generatepiPSCs with an average of 85±4% conversion efficiency. In a previoustime course experiment, there was also demonstrated an average of 88±2%conversion efficiency with a similar cell reprogramming protocol thatused the QQ-protein-delivery (Table 2).

To confirm this result, double immunostaining was performed using threepairs of pluripotency markers: SSEA4/Oct4, Tra1-60/Nanog andTra1-60/Oct4 (surface/nuclear markers). In FIG. 6B, the right paneldisplays examples of these double stains. The positive piPSCs wereconsidered only when both nuclei and surface markers showed positivestains. Once again, the results confirmed ˜80% conversion efficiency(FIG. 6B, Right Panel). To further verify that the immunostaining istruly positive, an internal control experiment was performed using sixpluripotency markers to a cell mixture that contains 30% piPSCs and 70%starting HNFs. The data indicated the expected dilution of thepositively stained cells (FIG. 7 ), providing additional support to thehigh conversion efficiency.

Such high conversion efficiency suggests that colony selection may notbe necessary during cell reprogramming to generate piPS cells and clonalexpansion may not be required during piPSC expansion. A recent reportindicated that long-term culture of human ESCs under a similarfeeder-free condition only contained a population of 85-94%) hESCs byflow cytometry using different pluripotency markers. This result issimilar to the conversion efficiency reported here, suggesting that thepiPSC method generates a nearly pure population of piPSCs.

Experiments shown in FIG. 8 were performed with both colony picking andwhole dish passaging. First, a single clear edged colony was picked andplaced into the feeder-free condition. It was noticed that this singlecolony started to lose its clear edge over several days and the cellsspread out into a monolayer. This was also noticed by Rodin et al thatpure hESCs spread out into a monolayer when plated in small clumps undera similar feeder-free condition. Once the cells reached confluency, theywere lifted and passaged into new dishes. Many clear edged coloniesformed next day and piPSCs often migrated out of the colonies, whilesome colonies maintained a clear edge (white arrows). These migratingcells form monolayer cells that may serve as the feeder cells for theremaining colonies. Immunostaining of both clear edged colonies andmonolayer cells was performed using Oct4 and Nanog antibodies. The dataclearly indicated that both types of cells were positively stained,suggesting that both colony and monolayer cells are piPSCs. The sameprocedure was repeated with the whole dish passaging and the sameresults were observed. For the whole dish passaging, data indicated that80-90% of cells had positive immunostains with six pluripotency markers(FIG. 6C), suggesting no difference between the two passaging methodsunder these conditions.

Characterizations of piPSCs.

Using the whole-dish passaging, the generated human piPSCs have beenstably and homogenously expanded for over 30 generations in afeeder-free culture condition for 6 months (FIG. 9 ). They formedcolonies with the morphology that is indistinguishable from hESCs. ThesepiPSC colonies prominently expressed ESC markers, including ALP, Oct4,Nanog, SSEA4, Rex1 and Tra1-60 (FIG. 10 ). As controls, the sameimmunostaining was performed using the starting HNFs, showing negativeresults (Right, FIG. 10 ). Quantitative reverse transcription PGR(qRT-PCR) analysis confirmed significantly enhanced endogenous geneexpressions of pluripotency genes in piPSCs at passage 5, including:Oct4, Sox2, Nanog, as compared with gene expression of HNFs (FIG. 11 A).It is noticed that the gene expression of these master pluripotencyregulators displayed a minor enhancement at the first passage (Day 6),but a major enhancement at passage 5 (day 22), indicating thetime-dependence of the pluripotency development aftercell-reprogrammtng. To verify pluripotency protein expression, westernblots of the piPSCs were performed and compared with the starting HNFcells. The results indicated significant protein expressions of thepiPSCs for four pluripotency markers, including Sox2, Oct4, Nanog andRex1. Sox2, Oct4 and Nanog are the three master pluripotent regulatorsand Rex-1 is a late pluripotency marker. In contrast, the starting HNFcells displayed no protein expressions of these four pluripotencymarkers. As a control, a housekeeping protein, actin, displayed an equalprotein expression level between piPSCs and HNFs (FIG. 11C). DNAmethylation analysis of the Nanog gene revealed that the promoterregions of Nanog were significantly demethylated in the piPSCs, whereasthe same regions were densely methylated in the parental HNF cells (FIG.11D). This result provides further evidence that the generated piPSCsdisplay an epigenetic regulation of the promoters of this masterpluripotency regulator, suggesting appropriate epigenetic cellreprogramming in the generated piPSCs. There was no karyotype changebetween the generated piPSCs and the parental HNFs (FIG. 11B),indicating no major chromosomal change between the parental HNFs and thedaughter piPSCs.

In Vitro and In Vivo Differentiations.

To examine the developmental potential of the generated piPSCs, in vitrodifferentiation and in vivo teratoma formation were performed. Embryoidbodies (EBs) were formed in 1-2 days using the suspension culturemethod. These EBs readily differentiated into the three primary germlayers in vitro, including ectoderm derivatives (cells expressing Nastinand Pax6), mesoderm derivatives (cells expressing Desmin and Brachyuryand mature beating cardiomyocytes) and endoderm derivatives (cellsexpressing AFP), as confirmed by immunostaining (FIGS. 12A-12C). Propernegative controls have been performed for immunostaining using theparenting HNFs, showing negative immunostains. When the EBs werecultured in a special medium that leads to neural lineage, these EBsreadily changed their morphologies in 1-2 weeks into the typicalmorphology of neural cells, including neurons, astrocytes andoligodendrocytes, immunocytochemical analysis confirmed the existence ofthese neural cell types positive for Tuj1 (FIG. 12D), GFAP (FIG.12E-12F) and O1 (FIG. 12G). Neural stem cells (NSCs) were also observedat an earlier time as confirmed by positive stains with Sox2 (FIG. 12H)and Nestin (FIG. 12I).

When piPSCs were transplanted into the kidney capsule of nude mice,teratoma formation was observed in 6 weeks (FIGS. 13A-13B). The thirdpassage piPSCs obtained from whole dish passaging were used fortransplantation. Before transplantation, these piPSCs were characterizedusing immunostaining with six pluripotency markers. Again, monolayerpiPSCs were intentionally prepared for immunostaining (FIG. 13C). Theresults indicated that virtually every cell displayed positive stainsfor all six pluripotency markers. Approximately 200,000 piPSCs weretransplanted into the left kidney capsule of nude mice. Node-likeformations were observed in the left flank area of the mice at three tofour weeks following implantation. The mice were sacrificed at six week.Histology data of the tissue slides indicated these teratoma containingtissues form all three primary germ layers, including neural andepidermal tissues (ectoderm), striated muscle and cartilage (mesoderm),and intestinal-like epithelium tissues (endoderm) (FIG. 14 ), confirmingthat the generated piPSCs exhibit pluripotency in vivo. This resultfurther provides an in vivo verification of the high conversionefficiency, since the generated piPSCs expanded with the whole dishpassaging were able to efficiently generate teratomas.

Recently, the Yamanaka's four reprogramming factors were replaced withSox2, Oct4 and Nanog which are the master regulators of pluripotency togenerate piPS cells. Our data again indicated very high conversionefficiency of 87±3% (Table 3). This new reprogramming protein cocktaileliminates the oncogenic proteins, Klf4 and c-Myc in the Yamanaka'sfactors, the generated piPS cells will have higher quality and minimizedtumorigenesis.

Discussion

The piPSC protocol disclosed herein applied the state-of-the-artQQ-protein delivery technology that solved the technical challengesassociated with the current iPSC techniques. First, the QQ-reagentsnon-covalently bind to the delivered proteins and camouflage them fromintracellular protease degradation, ensuring the delivered proteinsmaintain their native form and metabolic stability. Most importantly,the QQ-delivered proteins have the ability to specifically localize inthe targeted intracellular compartments based on their sequencelocalization signals. These features enable the delivered proteins to beindistinguishable from the endogenous proteins, the cell machineryfunctions as if they were the endogenous counterparts, demonstrating thephysiological relevance of the QQ-protein delivery technology.

Using QQ-protein delivery, the bacterialiy expressed recombinantreprogramming proteins were directly delivered into the nuclei of HNFsin 1.5 hour (FIG. 3 ), allowing one to skip the inefficient in vitroprotein refolding step. The intracellular protein folding machinerydirectly refolds the QQ-delivered reprogramming proteins, making thispiPSC protocol a fast, simple and inexpensive procedure. The QQ-proteindelivery is able to efficiently deliver four reprogramming proteins intothe nucleus of essentially every HNF, suggesting possible highconversion efficiency of generating piPSCs from HNFs. Data furtherindicated that cell reprogramming could be initiated within 24 hours ofQQ-protein delivery and was well-maintained during 48-72 hours andcompleted in 5 days after QQ-protein delivery (FIG. 4 ). Thissignificantly speeds up the procedure of piPSC generation, demonstratingthe enabling capability of the QQ-protein delivery technique.

To generate piPSCs with high conversion efficiency, both developmentgene silencing and pluripotent gene activation of human somatic cellshave to be efficiently achieved. This requires efficient delivery of thereprogramming proteins into the nuclei for interaction with differentpromoter and repressor regions of different genes. The QQ-proteindelivery meets this requirement and targeted delivers reprogrammingproteins into the nucleus of nearly every HNF, resulting in an 85±4%conversion efficiency of piPSCs from the starting HNFs. This generates anearly pure piPSC population that is similar to a pure hESC populationduring long-term self-renewal of hESCs under the similar feeder-freecondition. Such high conversion efficiency eliminates colony selectionduring cell reprogramming and clonal expansion. A whole dish passagingwas developed, generating a uniform monolayer piPSC population that iscritical to reduce differentiation during long-term self-renewal. Use ofhomogeneous monolayer piPSCs also provides more controllable conditionsfor design of differentiation condition, having the major advantage ofdriving differentiation into more homogenous population of the speciallineage cells when they are placed in a special lineage-inducing medium.

The generated piPSCs were human ESC-like cells, displaying significantlyenhanced expressions of the pluripotency genes, including three masterpluripotency regulators Sox2, Oct4 and Nanog (FIG. 11A). These threemaster pluripotency regulators also displayed major protein expressions(FIG. 11C). The generated piPSCs displayed differentiation potentialinto the three primary germ layers both in vitro and in vivo (FIGS. 12and 14 ). Indeed, these piPSCs were able to efficiently differentiateinto neural lineage with typical morphology of neurons, astrocytes andoligodendrocytes (FIGS. 12D-12I). Jaenisch's lab recently demonstratedthat reprogramming by four transcription factors was a continuousstochastic process where almost all mouse donor cells eventually gaverise to iPSCs upon continued growth and transcription factor expression.However, this method required 8 weeks to generate iPSCs with inhibitionof the p53/p21 pathway or overexpression of Lin28. The piPSC techniquedisclosed herein confirmed the high conversion efficiency withoutmanipulating any downstream pathways. This has the major advantages forfuture safe human clinical applications of the generated piPSCs.

Recent advances in using various genetic approaches have addressed someof the challenges of the current iPSC technology. This includesnon-integrating adenoviruses, transient transfection to deliverreprogramming genes, a piggyBac transposition system, Cre-excisableviruses and oriP/EBNA1-based episomal expression system. Studies alsodemonstrate that the present invention can replace and/or further reducethe number of transcriptional factors required for cell reprogramming.Nevertheless, these methods only provide low conversion efficiency andalso genetically alter the cells, imposing major biosafety issues of thegenerated iPSCs for safe human clinical applications. Currently, onlytwo reports are published on protein-induced cell reprogramming for bothmouse and human cells with extremely low conversion efficiency. ThepiPSC technology disclosed herein offers an efficient and fast method togenerate human piPSCs. This technology directly delivers bacteriallyexpressed proteins for cell reprogramming, making this method simple andinexpensive. The non-stochastic nature of this piPSC technique makes itpossible for reliable and accurate mechanistic studies of cellreprogramming. Importantly, this piPSC technique significantly speeds upthe entire process of generating patient-specific piPSCs with highefficiency, allowing one to quickly generate a panel of disease-specificpiPSCs as the starting materials for generating surrogate models ofhuman diseases for individual patient, to gain valuable insights intothe pathophysiology of the diseases, to discover new prognosticbiomarkers and to ensure a continuous supply of afflicted cell types fordrug screens and discovery.

Major concerns have been raised about the quality of the generated iPSCsusing the current iPSC methods. Results indicated slight patterndifferences in epigenetic changes between the generated iPSCs and humanESCs. Rather than being reset to an embryo-like state, methylationpatterns near the tips and centers of chromosomes in the iPSCs resembledthose in the adult tissues from which the iPSCs had been derived. Tosolve this problem, an efficient cell reprogramming method has to bedeveloped that completely resets the epigenetic clock of the startingsomatic cells to return to an ESC-like state. In addition, most currentiPSC/piPSC methods use oncogenes that may increase the mutational rate.Data reported recently demonstrated that pre-existing and new mutationsthat occur during and after reprogramming contribute to the highmutational load found in the current hiPSC lines. Selection during cellreprogramming, colony picking and subsequent clonal expansion might bethe contributing factors. Indeed, if the reprogramming efficiency isenhanced to a level such that no colony picking and clonal expansion arenecessary, the resulting hiPSCs could be potentially free of mutations.The piPSC technique disclosed herein provides such high reprogrammingefficiency. Furthermore, new reprogramming proteins, such as DNAde-methylases or methylcytosine dioxygenases, may be required tocompletely reset the epigenetic clock of the starting somatic cells,this piPSC technique disclosed herein can be used to screen these newreprogramming factors in a high-throughput fashion. Finally, sincetedious colony selection during reprogramming and colony picking/cionalexpansion are avoided that may generate human piPSCs free of mutations,this offers a cell reprogramming technique that significantly enhancesthe quality of the generated piPSCs for future safe human clinicalapplications (FIGS. 15-17 ).

Throughout this application, author and year and patents by numberreference various publications, including United States patents. Fullcitations for the publications are listed below. The disclosures ofthese publications and patents in their entireties are herebyincorporated by reference into this application in order to more fullydescribe the state of the art to which this invention pertains.

The invention has been described in an illustrative manner, and it is tobe understood that the terminology, which has been used herein, isintended to be in the nature of words of description rather than oflimitation.

Obviously, many modifications and variations of the present inventionare possible in light of the above teachings. It is, therefore, to beunderstood that within the scope of the described invention, theinvention can be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.

TABLE 1 Numbers of colonies versus reprogramming protein concentrationsusing the same reprogramming procedure. No Starting Protein Numbers ofNo Cycles Condition Ratio experiment cells concentration Time colonies 12 5 h/19 h 1:1:1:0.1 3 10³ 2 (μg/ml) 5 days 120 ± 20 2 2 5 h/19 h1:1:1:0.1 3 10³ 1 (μg/ml) 5 days 220 ± 30 3 2 5 h/19 h 1:1:1:0.1 3 10³0.50 (μg/ml) 5 days 505 ± 25 4 2 5 h/19 h 1:1:1:0.1 3 10³ 0.25 (μg/ml) 5days 520 ± 13 We performed 2 cycles of protein reprogramming, each cyclecontained a 5-hour incubation with four reprogramming proteins and a19-hour incubation without proteins. The protein ratio is:Oct4:Sox2:Klf4:c-Myc = 1:1:1:0.1. We started with the same number of HNFcells and performed triplicate for each experimental condition. Thecolony numbers were counted at day 5 and reported as the mean andstandard deviations (mean ± standard deviation). The generated piPS cellcolonies were stained with AP (an early pluripotent marker) at day 5 andRex-1 at day 8 (a late pluripotent marker).

TABLE 2 Percentage of the positively immunostained cells using differentpluripotent markers at different time points during the time course thatis shown in FIG. 4. ALP Nanog Oct4 Rex1 Tra1-60  24-hour 73% (438) 74%(530) 80% (547) 83% (517) 72% (340)  48-hour 79% (387) 74% (338) 83%(309) 84% (350) 80% (289)  72-hour 79% (265) 83% (334) 78% (425) 87%(280) 84% (221) 108 hour 86% (308) 87% (355) 86% (378) 90% (387) 87%(277)

The percentage shown here is the percentage of positively stained cellswith five different pluripotency markers. Percentage=positively stainedcells/total cell counted.

The number in the bracket is the total number cells counted forcalculation of positively stained cells.

TABLE 3 A table of conversion efficiency of piPS cell generation fromhuman newborn fibroblast using different combinations of Sox2, Oct4 andNanog, showing conversion efficiency ranges 84-90%. The conversionefficiency of the SON factors is 90 ± 3.5%. The numbers in the bracketare the cell numbers counted for calculation of conversion efficiency.Nanog/Oct4 Sox2/Oct4 Sox2/Oct4/Nanog Markers Nanog (N) Oct4 (O) (NO)(SO) (SON) Nanog 81 ± 1 (639) 83 ± 3 (661) 86 ± 4 (890) 88 ± 2 (593) 87± 5 (856) Oct4 85 ± 5 (800) 85 ± 5 (713) 91 ± 1 (716) 85 ± 4 (820) 93 ±3 (856) Rex1 90 ± 2 (965) 85 ± 4 (788) 91 ± 1 (777)  92 ± 2 (1207) 94 ±2 (613) Tra1-60 85 ± 1 (271) — 84 ± 2 (738) — 86 ± 3 (290) Average 85.3± 4% 84.3 ± 1% 88 ± 3% 88.3 ± 2.8% 90 ± 3.5%

A minimum of 10 randomly selected fields was scored for positively andnegatively stained cells in a triple-blinded manner to minimizesubjective interpretations (>300 cells).

We calculated conversion efficiency using the ratio of positivecells/total cells.

REFERENCES

-   1. Vazin T, Freed W J. Human embryonic stem cells: derivation,    culture, and differentiation: a review. Restor Neurol Neurosci.    2010; 28(4):589-603.-   2. Bahadur G, Morrison M, Machin L. Beyond the ‘embryo question’:    human embryonic stem cell ethics in the context of biomaterial    donation in the UK. Reprod Biomed Online. 2010 December; 21    (7):868-74.-   3. Hemmat S, Lieberman D M, Most S P. An introduction to stem cell    biology. Facial Plast Surg. 2010 October; 26(5):343-9.-   5. Lerou P H, Daley G Q. Therapeutic potential of embryonic stem    cells. Blood Rev. 2005 November; 19(6):321-31.-   7. Amit M, Shariki C, Margulets V, Itskovitz-Eldor J. Feeder layer-    and serum-free culture of human embryonic stem cells. Biol Reprod.    2004 March; 70(3):837-45.-   8. Ilic D. Culture of human embryonic stem cells and the    extracellular matrix microenvironmeni Regen Med. 2006 January; 1    (1):95-101.-   9. Takahashi K, Yamanaka S. (2006). Induction of pluripotent stem    cells from mouse embryonic and adult fibroblast cultures by defined    factors. Cell. 126:663-76.-   10. Amabile G, Meissner A. (2009). Induced pluripotent stem cells:    current progress and potential for regenerative medicine. Trends Mol    Med. 15:59-68.-   11. Lister R, Pelizzola M, Kida Y S, Hawkins R D, Nery J R, Hon G,    Antosiewicz-Bourget J, O'Malley R, Castanon R, Klugman S, Downes M,    Yu R, Stewart R, Ren B, Thomson J A, Evans R M, Ecker J R. (2011).    Hotspots of aberrant epigenomic reprogramming in human induced    pluripotent stem cells. Nature. 471, 68-73.-   12. Lee H, Park J, Forget B G, Gaines P. (2009). Induced pluripotent    stem cells in regenerative medicine: an argument for continued    research on human embryonic stem cells. Regen Med. 4:759-69.-   13. Kiskinis E, Eggan K. (2010). Progress toward the clinical    application of patient-specific pluripotent stem cells. J Clin    Invest. 120:51-9.-   14. Okita K, Ichisaka T, Yamanaka S. (2007). Generation of germ    line-competent induced pluripotent stem cells. Nature. 448:313-7.-   15. Maherali, N., Sridharan, R., Xie, W., Utikal, J., Eminli, S.,    Arnold, K, Stadtfeld, M., Yachechko, Y., Tchieu, J., Jaenisch, R.,    et al. (2007). Global epigenetic remodeling in directly reprogrammed    fibroblasts. Cell Stem Cell 1, 55-70.-   16. Wernig, M., Meissner, A., Foreman, R., Brambrink, T., Ku, M.,    Hochedlinger, K., Bernstein, B. E., and Jaenisch, R. (2007). In    vitro reprogramming of fibroblasts into a pluripotent ES-cell-like    state. Nature 448, 318-324.-   17. Nakagawa, M., Koyanagi, M., Tanabe, K., Takahashi, K.,    Ischisaka, T., Aoi, T., Okita, K., Mochiduki, Y., Takizawa, N., and    Yamanaka, S. (2008). Generation of induced pluripotent stem cells    without Myc from mouse and human fibroblasts. Nat. Biotechnol. 26,    101-106.-   18. Takahashi, K., Tanabe, K., Ohnuki, M., et al. (2007). Induction    of pluripotent stem cells from adult human fibroblasts by defined    factors. Cell, 131, 861-872.-   19. Yu, J., Vodyanik, M. A., Smuga-Otto, K., et al. (2007). Induced    pluripotent stem cell lines derived from human somatic cells.    Science, 318, 1917-1920.-   20. Park, I. H., Zhao, R., West, J. A., et al. (2008). Reprogramming    of human somatic cells to pluripotency with defined factors. Nature,    451, 141-146.-   21. Stadtfeld, M., Nagaya, M., Utikal, J., Weir, G., &    Hochedlinger, K. (2008). Induced pluripotent stem cells generated    without viral integration. Science, 322, 945-949.-   22. Okita, K., Nakagawa, M., Hyenjong, H., Ichisaka, T., &    Yamanaka, S. (2008). Generation of mouse induced pluripotent stem    cells without viral vectors. Science, 322, 949-953.-   23. Kaji K, Norrby K, Paca A, Mileikovsky M, Mohseni P, Woltjen K.    Virus-free induction of pluripotency and subsequent excision of    reprogramming factors. Nature 458, 771-775.-   24. Woltjen, K., Michael, I. P., Mohseni, P., Desai, R.,    Mileikovsky, M., Hamalainen, R, Cowling, R., Wang, W., Liu, P.,    Gertsenstein, M., et al. (2009). piggyBac transposition reprograms    fibroblasts to induced pluripotent stem cells. Nature 458, 766-770.-   25. Soldner, F., Hockemeyer, D., Beard, C, Gao, Q., Bell, G. W.,    Cook, E. G., Hargus, G., Blak, A., Cooper, O., Mitalipova, M., et    al. (2009). Parkinson's disease patient-derived induced pluripotent    stem cells free of viral reprogramming factors. Cell 136, 964-977-   26. Yu, J., Hu, K., Smuga-Otto, K., Tian, S., Stewart, R., Slukvin,    and Thomson, J. A. (2009). Human induced pluripotent stem cells free    of vector and transgene sequences Science 324, 797-801.-   27. Zhou H, Wu S, Joo J Y, Zhu S, Han D W, Lin T, Trauger S, Bien G,    Yao S, Zhu Y, Siuzdak G, Scholer H R, Duan L, Ding S. (2009).    Generation of induced pluripotent stem cells using recombinant    proteins. Cell Stem Cell. 4(5):381-4.-   28. Kim D, Kim C H, Moon J I, Chung Y G, Chang M Y, Han B S, Ko S,    Yang E, Cha K Y, Lanza R, Kim K S. (2009). Generation of human    induced pluripotent stem cells by direct delivery of reprogramming    proteins. Cell Stem Cell. 4(6):472-6.-   29. Warren, et al (2011) Highly Efficient Reprogramming to    Pluripotency and Directed Differentiation of Human Cells with    Synthetic Modified mRNA. Cell Stem Cell 7, 1-13.-   30. Jalving M, Schepers H. (2009). Induced pluripotent stem cells:    will they be safe? Curr Opin Mol Ther. 1:383-93.-   31. Robbins R D, Prasain N, Maier B F, Yoder M C, Mirmira R G.    (2010). Inducible pluripotent stem cells: not quite ready for prime    time? Curr Opin Organ Transplant 15:61-7.-   32. Rolletschek A, Wobus A M. (2009). Induced human pluripotent stem    cells: promises and open questions. Biol Chem. 390:845-9.-   33. Lister R, Pelizzola M, Kida Y S, Hawkins R D, Nery J R, Hon G,    Antosiewicz-Bourget J, O'Mailey R, Castanon R, Klugman S, Downes M,    Yu R, Stewart R, Ren B, Thomson J A, Evans R M, Ecker J R. (2011).    Hotspots of aberrant epigenomic reprogramming in human induced    pluripotent stem cells. Nature. 471, 68-73.-   34. Kim K, Doi A, Wen B, Ng K, Zhao R, Cahan P, Kim J, Aryee M J, Ji    H, Ehrlich L I, Yabuuchi A, Takeuchi A, Cunniff K C, Hongguang H,    McKinney-Freeman S, Naveiras O, Yoon T J, Irizarry R A, Jung N,    Seita J, Hanna J, Murakami P, Jaenisch R, Weissleder R, Orkin S H,    Weissman I L, Feinberg A P, Daley G Q. (2010). Epigenetic memory in    induced pluripotent stem cells. Nature. 467, 285-90.-   35. Polo J M, Liu S, Figueroa M E, Kuialert W, Eminli S, Tan K Y,    Apostolou E, Stadtfeld M, Li Y, Shioda T, Natesan S, Wagers A J,    Melnick A, Evans T, Hochedlinger K. (2010). Cell type of origin    influences the molecular and functional properties of mouse induced    pluripotent stem cells. Nat Biotechnol. 28, 848-55.-   36. Gore A, Li Z, Fung H L, Young J E, Agarwal S,    Antosiewicz-Bourget J, Canto I, Giorgetti A, Israel M A, Kiskinis E,    Lee J H, Loh Y H, Manos P D, Montserrat N, Panopoulos A D, Ruiz S,    Wilbert M L, Yu J, Kirkness E F, Izpisua Belmonte J C, Rossi D J,    Thomson J A, Eggan K, Daley G Q, Goldstein L S, Zhang K. (2011),    Somatic coding mutations in human induced pluripotent stem cells.    Nature, 471, 63-7.-   37. Scheper W, Copray S. (2009). The molecular mechanism of induced    pluripotency: two-stage switch. Stem Cell Rev. 5:204-23.-   38. Carey B W, Markoulaki S, Hanna J, Saha K, Gao Q, Mitalipova M,    Jaenisch R. Reprogramming of murine and human somatic cells using a    single polycistronic vector. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2009 January 6;    106(1):157-62.-   39. Shao L, Feng W, Sun Y, Bai H, Liu J, Currie C, Kim J, Gama R,    Wang Z, Qian Z, Liaw L, Wu W S. Generation of iPS cells using    defined factors linked via the self-cleaving 2A sequences in a    single open reading frame. Cell Res. 2009 March; 19(3):296-306.-   40. Ohnuki M, Takahashi K, Yamanaka S. Generation and    characterization of human induced pluripotent stem cells. Curr    Protoc Stem Cell Biol. 2009 June; Chapter 4:Unit 4A.2.-   41. Trehin R, Merkle H P. (2004). Chances and pitfalls of cell    penetrating peptides for cellular drug delivery. Eur J Pharm    Biopharrn. 58:209-23.-   42. Kabouridis P S. (2003) Biological applications of protein    transduction technology. Trends Biotechnol. 21-0.498-503.-   43. Sivashanmugam A, Meiners V, Cui C, Yang Y, Wang J & Li Q (2009).    Practical protocols for production of very high-yield of recombinant    proteins in Eschericia coli. Protein Science. 18:936-948.-   44. Chan, E. M., et al., (2009). Live cell imaging distinguishes    bona fide human iPS cells from partially reprogrammed cells. Nat    Biotechnol, 27(11): 1033-7.-   45. Li, Q., Huang Y., Murray, V. Chen, J and Wang, J. (2011) A Q    Q-reagent based protein transduction technology with intracellular    targeting capability. Nature, Biotechnology (Under Review).-   46. Li, Q., Huang Y., Xiao N., Murray V, Chen J and J Wang (2008).    Real Time Investigation of Protein Folding, Structure, and Dynamics    in Living Cells. A invited review in Method in Cell Biology,    Elsevier Inc. Editor: Bhanu Jena, 90, 287-325.-   47. Li, Q. and Wang, J. (2008). The QQ series of protein    transduction reagents and their applications. US patent (Submitted    on May 28, 2008, Pending) (application Ser. No. 12/128,320).-   48. Niwa H, Miyazaki J, Smith A G. (2000). Quantitative expression    of Oct-3/4 defines differentiation, dedifferentiation or    self-renewal of ES cells. Nat Genet. 24(4): 372-6. 49. Knoepfler    P S. (2009). Deconstructing stem cell tumorigenicity: a roadmap to    safe regenerative medicine. Stem Cells. 27(5):1050-6.-   50. Cho H J, Lee C S, Kwon Y W, Paek J S, Lee S H, Hur J, Lee E J,    Roh T Y, Chu I S, Leem S H, Kim Y, Kang H J, Park Y B, Kim H S.    (2010). Induction of pluripotent stem cells from adult somatic cells    by protein-based reprogramming without genetic manipulation. Blood.    16, 386-95.-   51. Rodin S, Domogatskaya A, Strom S, Hansson E M, Chien K R,    Inzunza J, Hovatta O, Tryggvason K. (2010). Long-term self-renewal    of human pluripotent stem cells on human recombinant laminin-511.    Nat Biotechnol. 28, 611-5.-   52. Raff M C, Abney E R, Cohen J, Lindsay R, Noble M. (1983). Two    types of astrocytes in cultures of developing rat white matter:    differences in morphology, surface gangliosides, and growth    characteristics. J Neurosci. 3:1289-1300.-   53. Jaenisch R, Young R. (2008). Stem cells, the molecular circuitry    of pluripotency and nuclear reprogramming. Cell. 32, 567-82.-   54. Hanna J, Saha K, Pando B, van Zon J, Lengner C J, Creyghton M P,    van Oudenaarden A, Jaenisch R. (2009). Direct cell reprogramming is    a stochastic process amenable to acceleration. Nature. 462:595-601.-   55. Yu J, Vodyanik M A, Smuga-Otto K, Antossewicz-Bourget J, Frane J    L, Tian S, Nte J, Jonsdoitir G A, Ruotti V, Stewart R, Slukvin I I,    Thomson J A. (2007). Induced pluripotent stem cell lines derived    from human somatic cells. Science. 318(5858): 1917-20.-   56. Feng B, Jiang J, Kraus P, Ng J H, Heng J C, Chan Y S, Yaw L P,    Zhang W, Loh Y H, Han J, Vega V B, Cacheux-Rataboul V, Lim B, Lufkin    T, Ng H H. (2009). Reprogramming of fibroblasts into induced    pluripotent stem cells with orphan nuclear receptor Esrrb. War Cell    Biol. 11 (2): 197-203.-   57. Lin S L, Chang D C, Chang-Lin S, Lin C H, Wu D T, Chen D T, Ying    S Y. (2008). Mir-302 reprograms human skin cancer cells into a    pluripotent ES-cell-like state. RNA. 14:2115-24.-   58. Kim J B, Zaehres H, Wu G, Gentile L, Ko K, Sebastiano V,    Arauzo-Bravo M J, Ruau D, Han D W, Zenke M, Scholer H R. (2008).    Pluripotent stem cells induced from adult neural stem cells by    reprogramming with two factors. Nature. 454:646-50.-   59. Heng H H, Squire J, Tsui L C. (1992). High-resolution mapping of    mammalian genes by in situ hybridization to free chromatin. Proc    Natl Acad Sci USA. 89, 9509-3.-   60. Heng H H, Stevens J B, Liu G, Bremer S W, Ye K J, Reddy P V, Wu    G S, Wang Y A, Tainsky M A, Ye C J. (2006). Stochastic cancer    progression driven by non-clonal chromosome aberrations. J Cell    Physiol. 208, 461-72.

The invention claimed is:
 1. A method of generating a homogenouspopulation of mammalian protein-induced pluripotent stem cells (piPSC),comprising: culturing mammalian somatic cells in the presence of acombination of QQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteins comprisingQQ-reagent modified Sox2 and QQ-reagent modified Oct4, for at least afirst or more reprogramming cycles, wherein the QQ-reagent modified Sox2and QQ-reagent modified Oct4 are denatured or non-denatured recombinantproteins, wherein each reprogramming cycle comprises culturing mammaliancells with the combination of QQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteinsfor a period of about 3 hours to 5 days, wherein the combination ofQQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteins comprises a QQ reagent,wherein the QQ reagent comprises polyethylenimine (PEI) and DOTAP/DOPE,wherein the QQ-reagent modified Sox2 and the QQ-reagent modified Oct4are each present in the combination in a concentration of greater than 2nanograms/milliliter (ng/ml) and no greater than 500 ng/ml, and whereinthe cultured mammalian cells are passaged in a whole dish; and passagingthe cultured mammalian cells in a whole dish under a feeder-freecondition, with the proviso that colony picking is not performed, togenerate a homogenous population of mammalian protein inducedpluripotent stem cells.
 2. The method of claim 1, further comprisingexpanding the homogenous population of mammalian protein inducedpluripotent stem cells using a whole dish passage method in afeeder-free condition.
 3. The method of claim 1, further comprising asecond reprogramming cycle comprising culturing the mammalian somaticcells in the presence of the combination of QQ-reagent modifiedreprogramming proteins, wherein each QQ-reagent modified reprogrammingprotein is present in a concentration of greater than 2nanograms/milliliter (ng/ml) and no greater than 500 ng/ml.
 4. Themethod of claim 3, wherein each QQ-reagent modified reprogrammingprotein is present in a reduced concentration during the secondreprogramming cycle compared to the first reprogramming cycle.
 5. Themethod of claim 4, further comprising a third reprogramming cyclecomprising culturing the mammalian somatic cells in the presence of thecombination of QQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteins, wherein eachQQ-reagent modified reprogramming protein is present in a concentrationof greater than 2 nanograms/milliliter (ng/ml) and no greater than 500ng/ml.
 6. The method of claim 5, wherein each QQ-reagent modifiedreprogramming protein is present in a reduced concentration during thethird reprogramming cycle compared to the second reprogramming cycle. 7.The method of claim 1, wherein the mammalian somatic cells are selectedfrom the group consisting of: human primary cells, human normal somaticcells, human cancer cells, human disease cells, non-human mammalianprimary cells, non-human normal somatic cells, non-human mammaliancancer cells, and non-human mammalian disease cells.
 8. The method ofclaim 1, wherein the mammalian somatic cells are converted to piPSC witha conversion efficiency of greater than 80%.
 9. A method of generatingmammalian adult stem cells comprising: providing a homogenous populationof mammalian protein-induced pluripotent stem cells (piPSC) by a methodincluding: culturing mammalian somatic cells in the presence of acombination of QQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteins comprisingQQ-reagent modified Sox2 and QQ-reagent modified Oct4, for at least afirst or more reprogramming cycles, wherein the QQ-reagent modified Sox2and QQ-reagent modified Oct4 are denatured or non-denatured recombinantproteins, wherein each reprogramming cycle comprises culturing mammaliancells with the combination of QQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteinsfor a period of about 3 hours to 5 days, wherein the combination ofQQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteins comprises a QQ reagent,wherein the QQ reagent comprises polyethylenimine (PEI) and DOTAP/DOPE,wherein the QQ-reagent modified is Sox2 and the QQ-reagent modified Oct4are each present in the combination in a concentration of greater than 2nanograms/milliliter (ng/ml) and no greater than 500 ng/ml, wherein thecultured mammalian cells are passaged in a whole dish; and passaging thecultured mammalian cells in a whole dish under a feeder-free condition,with the proviso that colony picking is not performed, therebygenerating a homogenous population of mammalian piPSC; anddifferentiating the piPSC to produce adult stem cells.
 10. The method ofclaim 9, wherein the adult stem cells are selected from the groupconsisting of: neural stem cells, mesochymal stem cells andhematopoietic stem cells.
 11. A method of generating mammalian adultprogenitor cells comprising: providing a homogenous population ofmammalian protein-induced pluripotent stem cells (piPSC) by a methodincluding: culturing mammalian somatic cells in the presence of acombination of QQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteins comprisingQQ-reagent modified Sox2 and QQ-reagent modified Oct4, for at least afirst or more reprogramming cycles, wherein the QQ-reagent modified Sox2and QQ-reagent modified Oct4 are denatured or non-denatured recombinantproteins, wherein each reprogramming cycle comprises culturing mammaliancells with the combination of QQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteinsfor a period of about 3 hours to 5 days, wherein the combination ofQQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteins comprises a QQ reagent,wherein the QQ reagent comprises polyethylenimine (PEI) and DOTAP/DOPE,wherein the QQ-reagent modified is Sox2 and the QQ-reagent modified Oct4are each present in the combination in a concentration of greater than 2nanograms/milliliter (ng/ml) and no greater than 500 ng/ml, wherein thecultured mammalian cells are passaged in a whole dish; and passaging thecultured mammalian cells in a whole dish under a feeder-free condition,with the proviso that colony picking is not performed, therebygenerating a homogenous population of mammalian piPSC; anddifferentiating the piPSC to produce adult progenitor cells.
 12. Themethod of claim 11, wherein the adult progenitor cells are selected fromthe group consisting of: cardiac progenitor cells and pancreasprogenitor cells.
 13. A method of trans-differentiation to generatesomatic cells comprising: providing a homogenous population of mammalianprotein-induced pluripotent stem cells (piPSC) by a method including:culturing mammalian somatic cells in the presence of a combination ofQQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteins comprising QQ-reagentmodified Sox2 and QQ-reagent modified Oct4, for at least a first or morereprogramming cycles, wherein the QQ-reagent modified Sox2 andQQ-reagent modified Oct4 are denatured or non-denatured recombinantproteins, wherein each reprogramming cycle comprises culturing mammaliancells with the combination of QQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteinsfor a period of about 3 hours to 5 days, wherein the combination ofQQ-reagent modified reprogramming proteins comprises a QQ reagent,wherein the QQ reagent comprises polyethylenimine (PEI) and DOTAP/DOPE,wherein the QQ-reagent modified is Sox2 and the QQ-reagent modified Oct4are each present in the combination in a concentration of greater than 2nanograms/milliliter (ng/ml) and no greater than 500 ng/ml, wherein thecultured mammalian cells are passaged in a whole dish; and passaging thecultured mammalian cells in a whole dish under a feeder-free condition,with the proviso that colony picking is not performed, therebygenerating a homogenous population of mammalian piPSC; anddifferentiating the piPSC to produce terminally differentiated somaticcells.
 14. The method of claim 13, wherein the terminally differentiatedsomatic cells are selected from the group consisting of: cardiomyocytes,neurons, brown adipocytes, and insulin secreting beta-cells.